Catalyzt
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
So, I think I'm getting smarter about shifting in a way that's both efficient and easier on the chain-- either that, or the bike is breaking in, because I'm climbing hills 10% faster than I was the first week I had the Motobecane. (E5000 motor, only 40 Nm of torque, full manual shifting, no brake-throttle cutout.) But I still find this a challenge, so a few questions:
* The goal is to have a silent, or relatively quiet "click" when I shift, correct? A loud "clank" where I actually feel friction is what I'm trying to avoid, I think. It seems like it's not a binary issue, there's a whole continuum between a terrible shift and a perfect one.
* I understand that the idea is to just back off on the crank pressure a bit while still spinning the crank, so you're not shifting under load. However, sometimes this doesn't seem to work-- I'll spin without much pressure, and get a louder "clank" anyway. Any idea what I could be doing wrong?
* Approaching a steep uphill from a steep downhill, I try to downshift earlier than I would on an acoustic bike, but I also don't want to shift straight to the optimal gear for the steepest part of the hill. Let's say that's third gear-- I frequently will shift to, say, sixth so I'm providing both human and motor power to the drive train as I start to ascend the hill, before it gets steep, and then try to downshift when the drive train is under a little load, but not much.
Any tips or tricks for making this smoother? Seems like it's easiest to shift when the pedals are vertical, in the brief interval before one pedal takes up the load from the other, but I still have occaisional loud shifting happening!
Thanks,
* The goal is to have a silent, or relatively quiet "click" when I shift, correct? A loud "clank" where I actually feel friction is what I'm trying to avoid, I think. It seems like it's not a binary issue, there's a whole continuum between a terrible shift and a perfect one.
* I understand that the idea is to just back off on the crank pressure a bit while still spinning the crank, so you're not shifting under load. However, sometimes this doesn't seem to work-- I'll spin without much pressure, and get a louder "clank" anyway. Any idea what I could be doing wrong?
* Approaching a steep uphill from a steep downhill, I try to downshift earlier than I would on an acoustic bike, but I also don't want to shift straight to the optimal gear for the steepest part of the hill. Let's say that's third gear-- I frequently will shift to, say, sixth so I'm providing both human and motor power to the drive train as I start to ascend the hill, before it gets steep, and then try to downshift when the drive train is under a little load, but not much.
Any tips or tricks for making this smoother? Seems like it's easiest to shift when the pedals are vertical, in the brief interval before one pedal takes up the load from the other, but I still have occaisional loud shifting happening!
Thanks,